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Dense polyrhythmic-electro-experimental-hybrid-pop-hop built with fragments of everyday sound.
Genre:
Electronic: Pop Crossover
Release Date:
2007
Vertical Lines A
© Copyright-caleb mueller
(634479461293)
Record Label: Blank Squirrel Musics
SPECIAL: 30% discount if you buy more than one copy of it today!
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In Elmira, Ontario, the twenty-eighth day of October 2005 was another one of those anonymous days that seem to exist solely to fill out a week: comfortable but mundane, overcast and forgettable, just like every other brisk Canadian fall day. This unremarkable backdrop is where ‘Vertical Lines A’ takes root. With a stack of 60-minute cassettes and tape recorder in tow, Decomposure (spare time musician/art guy Caleb Mueller) followed his average day around to capture and preserve its unique sound signature that would otherwise have simply evaporated. Over the course of the year following that recorded day, he worked through a detailed process of digitally deconstructing each hour-long slur of sound into hundreds of individual clicks and thumps and pings. Then he built songs from them. Or song-ish things, anyway.
The result is an eclectic, unrelenting collage with a sound almost completely removed from its nondescript origin: bright harmonic pop refracts through bristling drill’n’bass, handcrafted electrofunk bumps up against epic abstract glitch-hop, cavernous acoustic meditation shares a table with field recordings and jittery dancehall. Of course, shifting across genre lines this restlessly could just as easily disintegrate into unfocused mush, and it does. Or wait, no, Decomposure manages to patch the elements together by anchoring them to crisp, unvarnished vocals and the precise punctuation of his careful beat orchestration.
While 2005’s quietly acclaimed ‘At Home and Unaffected’ was marked by an uneasy oscillation between instrumental and vocal tracks, ‘Vertical Lines A’ marks Decomposure’s first all-vocal effort, and he commits himself fully to it. While his previous albums certainly gathered lyrically from their surroundings and vented, they never reached levels as intimate or as sprawling as this: layers of song compete for space and bewildered paragraphs tumble out like leaves from each of the album’s branches. And yes, it is an album - it’s meant to be headphone music, a listen-all-the-way-through progression that won’t slip quietly into the background, the kind of thing that wants to build a tiny enclosed world and demands repeat listening to truly bloom. So yeah, it’s gonna sell millions. Luckily, Decomposure has a day job.
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION >
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Each copy of Vertical Lines A contains a 16-page illustrated booklet, is assembled by hand, uniquely numbered, and comes with an additional DVD stocked with (probably too many) supplemental materials, including:
• original sound sources for all 11 hours
• a 79-page annotated sketchbook
• a video overview of the album
• instrumentals and isolated beats
• composite song screenshots
• photo galleries containing nearly 3000 blurry photos
• an interview on CKUW
• process recordings
• and more - 15+ hours/3 Gigs of stuff
MINI-BIO >
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Decomposure is Caleb Mueller, a 24-year-old Canadian guy from the barren prairies of Saskatchewan, although he's spent quite a bit of time in Ontario at this point and should probably concede that he's stuck there, at least for now. He completed two albums on the Unschooled Label, 2004's ‘Taking Things Apart' and 2005's ‘At Home and Unaffected,' before moving on to 2007's ‘Vertical Lines A' on Blank Squirrel. He currently works full-time as a graphic artist in Elmira, Ontario, but spends the remainder of his days chipping away at his own music and art. He lives with his wife, Nicole, and their bunny, Bunny. And here's some quotes about old albums that make him sound even gooder:
'A polished and original listen which excites time and time again. Consistently diverse and a genuine talent for sequencing & production skills. Immensely satisfying with unbeatable results.' - CMJ New Music
'This collection of songs left me blinded by its musicality on my first listen and I simply can't put the CD back into its little plastic tray until I've dissected every element within. This may take a very long while but you'll want to try it as well! I am simply overwhelmed and in awe of the arrangements that Decomposure offers us, beautifully manipulated sounds and lyrically lovely sometimes distant vocals which do urge the listener to want to sing along. This collection of music is unlike most electronic music you will find out in the modern world today. It is full of surprises and passages that keep us listening with full intent. For anyone interested in the melding of genres or the unclassifiable this album is highly recommended - well worth your money and your FULL attention.' - Modsquare
'At first the skittering beats and cut-n-paste sampling of 'Whose Side Are You On?' are disorienting, but once the jaw-dropping genius of Mueller's hi-tech lo-fi approach sinks in, you wonder why all music doesn't sound this brilliant?' - Chart Attack
'I can’t help but think he probably used to be the nerdy kid carrying an instrument case in one arm and a big stack of textbooks in his other one that used to get the crap kicked out of him in high school.' - Blogcritics.org
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This may become one of 2007's highest achievements
author: John Book, Music For America
There have been an incredible amount of great music to come out this year, and this will definitely be in my top list at the end of the year. I'm not sure what's being distributed in the water systems of Canada, but if Verticle Lines A (Blank Squirrel) by Decomposure is any indication, I may have to travel up north and tap into the system.
Decomposure is from the mind of Caleb Mueller, originally from Saskatchewan but now calls Ontario is home turf. It's hard to describe the music of Verticle Lines A in a simple manner, so I'm going to do this differently.
There are 11 indexed songs on the CD, with each one being an hour of the day (i.e ."Hour 1", "Hour 2", "Hour 3", etc.) What you are hearing is a portion of the day in the life of Decomposure, created by recordings from different types of media. In other words, some songs sound like they were mastered directly from a cassette, then latered with samples and beats. Other songs sound more professional in its approach, but still saw raw like a homemade demo, or as if you fell into a pothole and were watching your wounds open slowly. It's that type of an album. The songs range from being sweet acoustic folk ballads to all out hip-hop tracks with Chemical Brothers-type execution. There will be bursts of natural sound coming in from various places, tape hiss enhanced to give the sounds color and flavor, and even when he bounces from folk to hip-hop to songs sung with punk rock vengeance, he knows how to do them all equally well. Some of his "hours" are instrumental, or may be nothing more than natural sound accented with music, but they seem to piece together a puzzle that isn't evident at first. As the album goes along, you tend to sense that there is a puzzle, but the final picture is unknown. In truth, you never get a true glimpse of "the final picture", in fact it's open ended. What this does is make you want to hear more of what he has to offer, because you know it will be new, different, and as surprising as this is.
The cover art is interesting too, for my copy was tied into a bow. When untied, the cardboard cover opens up to a book. The cover looks town and so do the pages, featuring various text and imagery. You then figure out that this CD is a travelogue of sorts, as if he went on a long drive out to nowhere, popped in a cassette or mini-disc player, and pressed record. These are his diary entries. This package also comes with a bonus DVD, featuring the lyrics, audio files of the samples on the audio CD, and even a self-made documentary that takes the listener, now viewer, deeper into the world of Decomposure. What would have been cool was if he did a hi-rez or 5.1 surround sound mix, but perhaps I'm asking for too much. What he offers here is more than satisfactory, in fact more than what a lot of artists offer. It's a fantastic and trippy musical experience which he enhances with the packaging and a bonus DVD to boot. I like the journey, and I'm glad Mr. Mueller allowed me to hitchhike for awhile.
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